'Frankenstorm' Heads Toward US East Coast

Hurricane Sandy pulled away from the Bahamas on Saturday after killing at least 41 people in the Caribbean, beginning a slow march toward the US East Coast where it threatens to hit as one of the worst storms in decades.

MIAMI: Hurricane Sandy pulled away from the Bahamas on Saturday after killing at least 41 people in the Caribbean, beginning a slow march toward the US East Coast where it threatens to hit as one of the worst storms in decades. The late-season storm has been dubbed "Frankenstorm" by some weather watchers because it will combine elements of a tropical cyclone and a winter storm. Forecast models show it will have all the ingredients to morph into a massive and potentially catastrophic "super storm."

Governors in states along the US East Coast declared states of emergency on Friday, and officials urged residents to stock up on food, water and batteries in the event the storm develops as forecast. The US Navy ordered all ships in the Norfolk, Virginia, area, including a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, out to sea to ride out the approaching storm. "We're expecting a large, large storm," said Louis Uccellini, director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Center for Environmental Prediction. "The circulation of this storm as it approaches the coast could cover about the eastern third of the United States."

Sandy, a Category 1 hurricane, battered the Bahamas southeast of Florida on Friday. The storm was expected to crawl northward on Saturday and Sunday and then turn toward the US coast. On its current projected track, Sandy could make landfall on Monday night or Tuesday somewhere between North Carolina and southern New England, forecasters said. The storm packs the potential to cause widespread power outages and unleash flooding and even dump snow as far inland as West Virginia. It also threatens to disrupt air travel all along the US East Coast.

Early Saturday morning, Sandy was about 375 miles (600 km) south-southeast of Charleston, South Carolina, packing sustained winds of 75 miles per hour (120 km per hour). It was moving slowly over the Atlantic at 7 mph (11 kph), the US National Hurricane Center said. Sandy was forecast to weaken to a tropical storm before strengthening into a Category 1 hurricane over open water on Sunday. The storm, coming in the final weeks before the US presidential election on November 6, was presenting a challenge to the campaigns of US President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney.

Romney canceled a rally scheduled for Sunday evening in Virginia Beach, Virginia. President Barack Obama's re-election campaign announced that Vice President Joe Biden also canceled a Saturday trip to Virginia Beach. Ahead of the election, millions of Americans are taking advantage of early voting arrangements to cast their ballots. State officials said they had put in place contingency plans in case Sandy caused extended power outages or other problems that could disrupt voting. In New York City, officials were considering shutting down the country's largest mass transit system, worried the storm's impact could cause flooding or high winds that would endanger subways and buses.

Much of Florida's northeast coast was under a tropical storm warning and storm watches extended up the coast through South Carolina. Along North Carolina's Outer Banks, which jut out into the Atlantic, vacationers in large camper trailers and motor homes streamed off the barrier islands. Many forecasters are warning that Sandy could be more destructive than last year's Hurricane Irene, which caused billions of dollars in damage across the US Northeast.